Ocean County Preserves Good Luck Point Property

The leaf waste compost was brought to locations in Good Luck Point and used as the base for spartina growing. (Photo by Chris Lundy)

  OCEAN COUNTY –The Ocean County Board of Commissioners recently approved the preservation of Good Luck Point in Berkeley Township.

  The Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund Advisory Council recommended its purchase as part of ongoing efforts to protect the coastal marsh in that area according to Commissioner Virginia E. Haines.   Haines, who serves as liaison to the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust program said, “we will be adding this property to the 22 others that have already been preserved.”

  “This is an area of Ocean County that was devastated when Superstorm Sandy came ashore in October 2012. It’s important to continue to protect this area so future storms will not have the same effect,” Haines added.

  The Board of Commissioners approved the purchase following a public hearing at their last meeting. The property owner accepted a negotiated offer of $247,000 for the land.

  The site is nearly three-fourths of an acre, and is located off Dorrance Drive, which is adjacent to approximately 10 acres of existing open space in the Good Luck Point area.

The spartina being planted in leaf waste compost brought to Good Luck Point was expected to improve the health of the marsh. (Photo by Chris Lundy)

  Haines explained, “the funding for this purchase is coming directly from the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund. Throughout the history of preserving Good Luck Point properties, there have been some purchases made with other funding sources including Blue Acres funds along with other partnerships that we have developed.”

  Blue Acres is a funding source through the New Jersey Department of Environment Protection. Since its creation in 1995, the program has worked to protect public safety and the environment by relocating New Jersey families whose homes are subject to repeated flooding and acquiring property for use as natural flood storage, parks and community open space.

  “This area has been a priority for land preservation under the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund program. The purchase of these lands preserves the coastal marsh which mitigates coastal flooding and also maintains the unique marsh habitat,” Haines said.

  County officials realized the importance of protecting the shorelines due to things such as tidal flooding when the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund was approved in 1998. Through the years, the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund has expended $9,029,900 for the approximate 724 acres of purchased land in the Good Luck Point area.

The land on either side of Beach Street in Good Luck Point is now preserved as open space, with a few houses in the distance. (Photo by Chris Lundy)

  “Good Luck Point has always been a location that we have looked to preserve, especially after it suffered catastrophic damage during Superstorm Sandy. We continue to work with partners and our open space preservation program to help with hazard mitigation in the future should there ever be another major storm,” Haines added.

  Director of the Ocean County Board of Commissioners Barbara Jo Crea explained, “as we preserve more land in the Good Luck Point area, we continue to protect our shoreline which will buffer the coastal marsh from development and help reduce the risk and impact of routine coastal flooding.”

  “Prioritizing these parcels of land continues with the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust Fund’s founding goals, which has helped us preserve almost 30,000 acres of open space throughout the County,” Crea added.